antepenultime

Etymology
First attested in 1860; from the, a feminine substantive of.

Noun

 * 1) * 1860, I.J.G. Scheller [aut.] and George Walker [tr.], A Copious Latin Grammar (1825), in: Leonhard Tafel and Rudolph L. Tafel, Latin Pronunciation and the Latin Alphabet, page 142
 * In polysyllables the penultime is accented if the syllable be long, but in all other cases the accent is laid upon the antepenultime.
 * 1)  Antepenultimate position.
 * 2)  Any thing occurring as the antepenultimate  in a.
 * 1)  Antepenultimate position.
 * 2)  Any thing occurring as the antepenultimate  in a.
 * 1)  Any thing occurring as the antepenultimate  in a.
 * 1)  Any thing occurring as the antepenultimate  in a.